Abstract. An automated procedure for the analysis of aqueous samples by membrane disk extraction coupled on-line to capillary gas chromatography (GC) is presented. Organophosphorus pesticides are preconcentrated from aqueous samples on three 0.5 mm thick, 4.0 mm diameter XAD-2 membrane extraction disks which are mounted in a polymer holder for use in a PROSPEKT sample processor. The layers are dried by a stream of nitrogen (30 min at ambient temperature). Desorption of the analytes is carried out with ethyl acetate which is directly introduced into a retention gap under partially concurrent solvent evaporation conditions, using an early solvent vapor exit. The method is a fully software-controlled automated system, and includes sample preparation, sample transfer and GC analysis. The final analysis is carried out by GC with nitrogen-phosphorus (NPD) or mass-selective detection. The technique is applied to the determination of a series of organophosphorus pesticides in tap water and water from European rivers. With a sample volume of only 2.5 mL, the detection limits achieved with the NPD were 20-50 ng L-' in tap water and 20-100 ng L-' in river water.
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Take down policyIf you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Use of an open-tubular trapping column as phaseswitching interface in on-line coupled reversed-phase liquid chromatography-capillary gas chromatography* .Hans G. J. Mol, Jacek Staniewski, Hans-Gerd Janssen and Care1 A. Cramers
ABSTRACTThe applicability of open-tubular traps for phase switching in coupled RPLC-GC was studied. The phase-switching process involves sorption of the analytes of interest from a methanol-water mobile phase into the stationary phase of an open-tubular column, removal of the aqueous phase by purging the trap with nitrogen and desorption of the analytes with hexane. Water elimination carried out in this manner appears to be highly efficient. In the sorption step the sampling flow-rate and the capacity factors of the analytes in the trap are critical parameters. Using a 2 m x 0.32 mm I.D. trap with a swollen 5-pm stationary phase at flow-rates not exceeding 100 jd/min, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are trapped quantitatively from 300 ~1 of aqueous phases containing up to 65% (v/v) of methanol. For desorption 70-125 ~1 of hexane are needed. These volumes are easy to handle in solvent elimination carried out using a PTV injector prior to transfer of the analytes to a GC column.
The effects of three additives-ammonium acetate, ammonium formate, and nicotinic acid-to the liquid chromatographic (LC) eluent and of the vaporizer temperature on the ion formation of N-methyl carbamate pesticides in thermospray (TSP) mass spectrometry was investigated by using filament- or discharge-assisted ionization. Nineteen carbamates and 12 of their known environmental degradation products were used as model compounds. The additives cause a strong reduction in the abundance of the characteristic fragment ions [M + H - CH3NCO](+) and [M - H - CH3NCO](-) for some of the carbamates. The addition of nicotinic acid reduces the quasimolecular ion intensity and, in most cases, produces nicotinic acid adduct ions. The addition of ammonium acetate or ammonium formate increases the intensity of the quasimolecular ion and in most cases produces a base peak for the ammonium adduct ion. The combination of a suppression of fragmentation and an enhancement of quasimolecular ion formation produces an overall gain in sensitivity. As to more specific effects, the addition of the ammonium salts reduces the intensity of M(-•) with the chlorinated carbamate barban and suppresses the formation of "odd" adduct ions in the TSP mass spectra of most other carbamates. Monitoring the intensity of the fragment and the quasimolecular ion signal as a function of the probe stem temperature, and the related probe tip temperature, proved to be an easy method to study the thermal degradation of the carbamates. This monitoring procedure showed that methiocarb and its sulfone already suffer from thermal degradation at a stem temperature of 90°C and that these compounds will therefore present problems in quantitation with LC/TSP mass spectrometry.
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